Somehow (I don't know how exactly) I broke the lightswitch in the kitchen for the fixture over the kitchen table. It's stuck in the ON position and won't turn OFF, opting instead to jam halfway down each time I try to toggle it. I have an illustrious career of breaking things (though not as illustrious as doomsey as I'm sure I've never crashed a remote control) but this is a first for me.

I'm going to unscrew the bulb from the fixture and leave the switch up in the "on" position. I hope whatever broke inside will refrain from arcing and catching fire before I can replace the switch.

Could we leave the lights on this time

[Edit 7:59 PM] I've replaced the switch -- fortunately I live near a number of home improvement stores, so securing a new unit wasn't too hard. Copper-clad aluminum, besides being crappy for wiring, also makes your light switches more expensive. This one was $3.27! For a single 15A two-position switch!

PS: Looking in the wall box as I replaced the broken switch made me sad.

First, the wall box is not properly mounted to a wall stud -- it's just sort of floating in space. That's bad. Second, the way things are wired up in there (snarled, shamelessly mixing pure copper with copper clad aluminum, twist caps three sizes too large)? It removes my faith in a higher power.

When my brother got his house his grandfather and I spent most of an afternoon replacing the house wiring. All 1950s knob-and-tube stuff. It horrifies me that there was a time when that shit was state of the art.

When my ex-wife moved into her house, a friend helped rewire some of it. Some of it was done right, although due to the age it had threaded iron pipe for conduit.

The light on the stairs to the attic was wired in with a length of air-conditioner extension cord, though.

And when the friend removed one of those decorative covers from a disused ceiling box, there was a flash and the breaker popped. On inspection he found that when he removed it, the hot wire, which had not been cut, capped, or taped, had contacted the brass cover and had welded itself to the metal.

There isnt anything wrong with aluminium as a conductor. Its has almost as good electrical conduction as copper, is both lighter and stronger, and the effects of oxidization are not too bad. (Just requires a little preparation, as does copper.)

It probably has to do with the cost and economics of the manufacture, if they were already having to cut corners in the first place.

Feren: I'm having a day where I'm doing okay but still want to knock somebody's teeth in with a steel pipe.Ashryn: You always have those days <3Ashryn: It's your natural mode of operationFeren: ... good point.Ashryn: 'The sun is shining! Everybody's happy! You don't deserve teeth! *WHACKWHACK*'

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"A bullet sounds the same in every language."-- Stewie Griffin

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Wake me up insideWake me up insideCall my name and save me from the darkBid my blood to run before I come undoneSave me from the nothing I’ve become

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"One more brain cell and he'd be dangerous, one less and he'd be a plant." -- Garry